Phillip Terry: Movies, TV, and Bio
Phillip Terry

Phillip Terry

Actor

Born March 7, 1909 in San Francisco, California, USA

The only child of a San Francisco couple, actor Phillip Terry was born Frederick Henry Kormann on March 7, 1909. His father, a chemical engineer in the oil fields, moved about in his work so Phillip was sent to live with relatives in New Jersey to achieve more stable schooling. Following high school graduation, Phillip worked for a time in the oil fields, with the assist of his father, as a roustabout, a tool pusher and rig builder. He later studied at Sacred Heart College, then Stanford University where he became both a football and track star. It was at Stanford that he also developed an interest in acting. After a brief, unsuccessful stay in New York, Phillip traveled to England and studied at the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art (1933). He grew homesick after a few years, however, and returned to America, landing a job in Los Angeles with CBS Radio as a dramatic player of Shakespeare and other classics. As luck would have it, an MGM agent caught one of his broadcasts and set up an interview. Phillip was signed after a successful screen test and groomed in unbilled film bits; one of these movies was Mannequin (1937) starring Joan Crawford, who would figure prominently into his life down the road. Unable to improve his lot at MGM, he signed with Paramount and finally earned higher visibility in such films as The Monster and the Girl (1941), The Parson of Panamint (1941) (title role), Torpedo Boat (1942), and Wake Island (1942). Around this time, Philip, by chance, happened to hook up with actress Crawford. After a whirlwind romance of only six weeks, the pair married in July of 1942. The marriage would not last, however, divorcing a mere four years later. When Phillip left Paramount in the mid-40s, he signed up with RKO. His movies and no performances were no great shakes with such routine fodder as Music in Manhattan (1944) and Pan-Americana (1945) all he could find. His better work came when he was loaned out. Despite the fact that he appeared in more than eighty movies and was a highly personable gent, most of Phillip's roles ended up unbilled or unmemorable. His better pictures, in which he served as a second lead, were the Oscar-winning The Lost Weekend (1945) starring Ray Milland, and To Each His Own (1946) with Olivia de Havilland. As his career waned, he started focusing on real estate and made himself a rich man with smart investments. From the 1950s on he was seen only sporadically in films and on TV. He retired completely in 1973 after suffering the first of what would be a series of strokes. His health steadily declined and he died of pneumonitis in 1993.

Top titles

  • The Lost Weekend
  • Born to Kill (1947)
  • Bride Of Boogedy
  • Perry Mason Season 1
  • Maverick: The Complete First Season
  • Lock Up
  • On Borrowed Time
  • Marie Antoinette (1938)
  • Boys Town
  • Three Comrades (1938)
  • Bataan
  • It's a Wonderful World (1939)
  • Of Human Hearts
  • Too Hot To Handle (1938)
  • Mannequin (1937)
  • Honolulu
  • You're Only Young Once
  • The Great Waltz
  • Navy Blue And Gold
  • Junior G Men

Filmography

  • 1961
    Explosive Generation
  • 1959
    Lock Up
  • 1958
    Man From God's Country (1958)
  • 1957
    Maverick: The Complete First Season
  • Perry Mason Season 1
  • 1954
    Bride Of Boogedy
  • 1947
    Born to Kill (1947)
  • Beat The Band
  • 1945
    The Lost Weekend
  • 1943
    Bataan
  • 1940
    Junior G Men
  • 1939
    It's a Wonderful World (1939)
  • On Borrowed Time
  • Honolulu
  • Balalaika
  • 1938
    Boys Town
  • Of Human Hearts
  • Three Comrades (1938)
  • Marie Antoinette (1938)
  • The Great Waltz
  • Too Hot To Handle (1938)
  • 1937
    You're Only Young Once
  • Navy Blue And Gold
  • Rosalie
  • Mannequin (1937)

Connections

  • Howard Da Silva

    Howard Da Silva

  • Robert Wise

    Robert Wise

  • Lawrence Tierney

    Lawrence Tierney

  • Walter Slezak

    Walter Slezak

  • June Clayworth

    June Clayworth

  • Ralph Edwards

    Ralph Edwards

Genres

  • Thriller
  • Action & Adventure
  • Comedy
  • Horror
  • Music Videos & Concerts
  • Western
  • Military & War
  • Fantasy
  • Drama
  • Romance